Floods affect nearly 3 million Cambodians

Floods affect nearly 3 million Cambodians

AS another rain-laden typhoon bore down on the inundated Mekong River system this

week, the Cambodian Government estimated flood damage at $79 million.

SOAKED AGAIN: Thirty hours of nonstop rain between October 10 and 12 brought Phnom-Penhois to their knees in flood waters in low-lying parts of the city, with renewed fears that the capital would be inundated. This cyclo driver negotiates his way along the road between the National Assembly and the Royal Palace.

Relief organizations worked to bring in international aid and to deliver food and

supplies to thousands of families living on patches of high ground surrounded by

flood water.

Prime Minister Hun Sen said in a speech broadcast on National Radio on October 10

that the number of people affected by the flooding was 2.7 million, that 252 Cambodians

The Government was delivering food and emergency packages and villagers in different

provinces said they had received 25 kilogram bags of rice from Hun Sen.

In the Kiri Vong district, six kilometers from Vietnam, Long Ly, deputy governor,

said he is very worried about the future.

"There is a saying that you lose your harvest one year and you are three years

poor," said Ly.

"Please find a way to help us so Cambodian people don't have to go through three

years of poor."

He said some farmers are hoping to plant a late-season, fast-growing rice crop as

soon as the water recedes but they need rice seed, empty bags they can fill with

sand or dirt to shore up dikes and canals, and petroleum to run their pumps so they

can reduce the water level in the paddies and prepare the fields for planting. They

also need rice to eat.

It may not look like it, but this is a "toll gate" in flooded Takeo province. These guys were levying a 2000-riel charge on any boat that came close. They seemed serious, and carried guns to make their position clear.

Ly said the eastern part of his province was totally flooded as was the road to Vietnam.

He said school should have started but flood victims had sought refuge in the district

schools and there were no classrooms for the students.

Khut Sorn, a 45-year-old mother of four children, said her four hectares of rice

fields were destroyed by flooding during the Pchum Ben holiday when the floods peaked

on September 29. She moved the family into a shack on the side of road where the

land is a bit higher and dryer.

She said the villagers are accustomed to flooding, but this is the worst they have

had in at least 25 years.

"Every year there is water, but this year it is waist level," she said.

She said she is in debt one million riels for planting. She is thinking about selling

the family cow to buy rice to eat. Many of her neighbors also said they either sell

their cows to get rice or go to Phnom Penh to look for enough work to survive till

the next harvest. "It is going to be difficult," said Sorn.

In the village of Peam Ro, in the province of Prey Veng, villagers said they left

their flooded homes a few weeks earlier, first moving their livestock to safety in

a schoolyard, then their families.

The water had receded by October 7 when the World Food Program brought reporters

to the area and the villagers stood ankle-deep in mud with their cows and chickens.

At the Mekong River Commission hydrologists are studying the causes of the flooding

in the four participating MRC countries of Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and Cambodia.

They are collecting data to learn from what they say has been an odd year with too

many intense typhoons sweeping west from northern Vietnam and not enough monsoon

blowing up from the southwest in Cambodia.

The result has been a checkerboard of serious drought in one province and flooding

in another. Takeo has both, said Sok Saing Im, a senior hydrologist.

"People can live with flooding but not of this magnitude," said Saing.

"With the frequency of these severe floods, now every five years, there is too

much damage."

He said the current flood is the worst in 80 years with the possible exception of

a flood in 1978 for which there is no accurate data because the Khmer Rouge didn't

keep flood records.

He said the chief cause of the Cambodia flooding is the intense typhoon season. But

deforestation from logging in eastern Thailand, Laos and parts of Cambodia and Vietnam

is also to blame, both because the denuded land doesn't drain the water, and because

it pushes too much silt into the rivers, reducing their capacity to hold the floodwaters,

he said.

Saing said a typhoon moving over Vietnam as the Post went to press could again threaten

to flood Phnom Penh. He said if the flooding resumes anew in the Mekong, it could

push waters back up the Tonle Sap again.

Malik at the ADB said the damage estimate could grow after the ADB returns in November

to make a more detailed assessment. He said the ADB could pick up all or some of

the emergency financing in the form of soft loans over a period of years. The ADB

already has a loan portfolio of about $400 million in Cambodia and is participating

in the preparation of a strategy for poverty reduction for the country.

ADB President Tadao Chino was scheduled to make his first visit to Cambodia this

week, arriving on October 12 after visiting Vietnam.

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